Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label publishing. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Did Amazon.com Kill the Dinosaur, Too?

image

Today, I received news that The Mystery Bookstore in Hollywood was closing. Argh!!

The Mystery Bookstore was known for its author events, sometimes hosting up to three a day on the weekends, and showed consistent support for first-time crime novelists. Stephen Jay Schwartz, author of Boulevard and Beat, laments the closing of the store. “This is terrible – it’s the end of an era,” he says. “My career began at the Mystery Bookstore and I count the owners and booksellers as personal friends.  There is a loyal community of authors and readers who will simply not recover from the loss of this iconic bookstore.” The Mystery Bookstore to Close

 

The reason for the closing is a coupling of losing to book buying clients to Amazon and the decline in store client’s pockets because of the economy.

I’ve participated in discussions both on and offline about the extinction of bookstores and what can be done to stop it. Everything we suggested The Mystery Bookstore has done since its opening in 2008: hosting great events, staffing knowledge & passionate readers, using PR to build community value, change…mys

This sad news has kicked the bricks against my confidence now.

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

What Kind of Books Do You Want to Read from African American Authors?

Grand Central PublishingLove, Honor, and Betray   by, Kimberla Lawson Roby

Grand Central Publishing wants to hear from it’s African American customers.

The  Grand Central Publishing survey is designed to assist in future acquisition and marketing decisions and how to best connect with readers and buyers of books by and about African Americans.

I think this is a great idea and another good use of using social media to connect with your ideal clients. The online survey went viral this week. It’s been passed around via email, Facebook and Twitter.

If you would like to participate, and encourage you to do, so, the Survey should take less than 10 minutes to complete. Click here to participate.

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Sunday, August 01, 2010

Christian Fiction Publishing Outside the Proverbial Box

My August  MD Column for Christian Fiction Online Magazine

This summer I have been blessed to feature women’s voices in Christian fiction. Last month I shared four women authors who have inspired us by telling American history through their eyes. This month I want to step into the future.

With the digitization of publishing and the changing formatting of book creation, the publishing industry is evolving, changing at a rate so fast the industry still hasn’t caught up. ABA publishers are purchasing CBA houses. Marquee authors are losing book deals or changing houses, while other authors, especially women authors, are riding these shifts like a soft ripple on a lake. Click link to continue.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Defining Failure in Publishing

Leaders need to let go, to accept that we don’t know best. Our role is to create the environment in which a sense of urgency around experiments is engendered, to accept and allow failure, to encourage iterative improvement and speedy adaptation, to facilitate information flow throughout the organisation: to orchestrate a process of improvisation, a dance in which the aim is to fail better, cheaper and faster so that we can all work out what will succeed.- Rebecca Smart President and Managing Director of Osprey Publishing on: Publishers Need to Fail Better, Cheaper, Faster | Digital Book World
Yesterday’s DigibookWorld Round Table discussed Defining Failure. The gist of the chat focused on assessment and experimentation. With new and faster reporting technology will publishers, bookstores, and authors do more to fail, in order to succeed in this changing reading cultural landscape? Like tech companies who assess new product launches, will publishers began to assess why certain books introduced into the marketplace fail instead of just leaving the book out to die like a thirsty turtle in the middle of a dessert?

A few interesting questions were raised:
  • Have  bookstores become literary showrooms?
  • Are there things bookstores can do more to fail?
  • Bookstores are currently serving as show rooms, whether they want to or not. Are book buyers going into bookstores looking at books, then buying them online?
Some even better tweets
  •  @MatthewDiener: $500K advance for book that will be lucky to earn back vs. $500K for MarkLogic server and an end-to-end XML workflow #dbw
  • @kratlee: literary fiction is the old spice of publishing - @glecharles
  • @bakersmark: One thing we don't do in this industry is postmortems to discover why a book failed and what we could have done better
  • @deegospel: Why aren’t bookstores cultural centers anymore? Where are the cultural centers & do they accommodate readers?
  • @MatthewDiener: "We are great at failing with books everyday." @donlinn Grt pt; an industry surviving on 10% success rate w/ print.
  • @deegospel: that is the great question: did the Old Spice social media blitz push sales?
  • RT @TomThompson: Remember the Old Spice guy took off with HUGE ad spend. Social media wouldn't have worked without it
Now your thoughts…
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Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Bookbyte: Kindle app for Android

Some Fun: GhostBusters at the NYP

Your source for trending topics in book publishing in 3 small bites. I ask you three questions, you can respond via your favorite social media service or blog use the hashtag #bookbyte so that we can respond and catalog your response. Here are the three newsmakers of the week with my question…

1. Is Your Bookshelf Your Phone?

If you could get digital books on the smartphone you already carry, would you still buy a dedicated e-reader? That's the question running through my mind after hearing that Amazon is developing a Kindle app for Android. The upcoming Kindle for Android app is set to hit smartphones this summer. (Source:  Will Amazon's Kindle Android App Hurt Kindle Sales? by JR Raphael, PC World)

2. Louis Gossett, JR. Signs at New York Book Week

In conjunction with BEA, New York Book Week will house author programs at venues such as Times Talks, the 92nd Street Y, and the main branches of the New York Public Library and Brooklyn Public Library, as well as smaller events at other libraries in the NYPL system and chain and independent bookstores throughout New York City and its boroughs. Gossett will present An Actor and a Gentleman
Monday, May 24 at 7:30 PM at Barnes & Noble, 1972 Broadway @ 66th Street. Question: Don’t get me wrong I love Gossett, Jr. But what’s up with all these AA celebs becoming authors now? Hollywood shortfall? (Source: New York Book Week)

3. Barnes and Noble launches Self-Publishing Program

Barnes & Noble has announced that this summer it will launchPubIT!, a new DIY publishing option for independent publishers and self-publishing writers to distribute their works digitally through BN.com and the Barnes & Noble eBookstore. (Source: http://bit.ly/aLj80d)

You can follow me on Twitter and Facebook to respond as well

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Friday, May 14, 2010

BookByte: This Year Get Published

Welcome to this Friday's edition of Bookbyte. Today I’m sharing this newsletter on the blog for those of you who are curious about the hashtag and may want to participate in the future.

Here are the top three articles I wanted to share with you about book publishing this week. If you want to nominate a post or article, email me at deegospelpr at gmail dot com. Don’t forget to comment on either Facebook or Twitter using the hashag #bookbyte 

1. Why the Battle for Books will Win?

Michael Hyatt, CEO of Thomas Nelson wrote a poignant post “My Defense of Books” this week. He shares the story of Dr. Ben Carson. Brilliant. Your thoughts…Is your passion for books worth fighting for?

2. How to Pitch an Agent or Editor at Writer’s Conference

Literary Agent Rachel Gardner shares some best practices and a book pitch template for aspiring writers attending writer’s conference. Are you pitching this year? Do you find this info helpful?

3. Will Google Editions’s Launch in Summer change the E-Bookstore Game?

While Google Editions books might be readable on Apple’s iPad and Amazon’s Kindle e-readers (the Sony Reader devices are a shoe-in since Google’s existing book library is one of their major selling points already), the store will compete with the iBooks and Kindle stores. That competition could be good for consumers but frustrating for Apple and Amazon.

BookByte is a weekly social digest. To receive it in your email every week for free, register here. You can follow me on Twitter and Facebook to respond as well.

 

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Friday, February 26, 2010

WR: The Death of the Query System

 

Student

This month I am trying out a new feature at Christian Fiction Blog called “Weekly Response/Weekend Chatter.” Instead of me blogging about everything Christian Fiction in the blogosphere I will share five key issues discussed along with my response to them. If you like this feature, let me know in the comments. If you would like to participate in the Weekly Responses use the hashtag #cfb in twitter or on facebook.

1. Does the Query System Work?

Literary Agent Rachelle Gardner responds blogs about writer complaints that the query system doesn’t work.

I actually think the query system works. It may be inefficient and time consuming, but it's incredibly democratic, which is something writers should appreciate. In the query system, everybody has access. All the other possible systems I've heard proposed are not nearly as democratic—they limit access somehow.

Some interesting comments came out of the discussion. The gist of them were that some believed the system was fine, because they had been successful and others don’t think the system works because they have not.

The main arguments were editors reject good books because based on the query they don’t think they can sell the book to the pocketful of editors they have business relationships with, that the agent won’t seek other editors—those they don’t know—to shop the book. Others thought the system wasn’t a sound business model, since the success rate of published books is around 15%.

My take, my personal take…

The query system works if you know how to work the system.

That’s not an opportunistic statement or a claim that I have cracked the code for query success. At DGP I offer proposal and query writing services, but I don’t guarantee a contract. That’s ludicrous.

What it means is that a writer must now understand the publishing business. And frankly, there’s no excuse that a writer shouldn’t in this day and age. The internet has afforded us a gateway into the publishing world. Literary agents, publishing house editors, literary publicists, industry insiders, bookstore owners are blogging and sharing this world to us. So why aren’t we taking advantage of it.

For the past two years I shopped my novel series to become published. In the beginning I submitted queries to agents and editors whom were referred to me or whom I personally knew. Every agent except one responded to my query. One. And I know these agents personally. One! The one agent told me that my writing had some work to do and thought it was too edgy for Christian fiction genre. Granted I have been reviewing Christian Fiction for Romantic Times and various other print publications for seven years and been a book critic and book awards judge for five. I know this genre like I know that I’m African-American. I have read and noted books released in CBA that shares the same theme, tone, and content that I had written. et…

But because I know this game. I know the words that is being said between the lines. What she meant was that the editors I close well with wouldn’t buy the book and don’t have the time or the resources to shop it to someone outside my circle. In short, I don’t know how to sell your book. Period.

Newsflash most agents don’t. Whether they want to believe it or not they have branded themselves. Editors know which agents will supply a certain type of author. The trick is finding an editor who is branded to shop your story.

Or you can shop the book yourself. I entered a writing contest, whereby the prize was to have my book read by an editor of a major publishing house. I won third place at last year’s Romance Slam Jam Contest. The contest facilitator gave me a referral to an editor whom I believed represented the publishing house that would champion my story.

Now this is where the tricky part came in. I had to submit a great query and proposal. I had to hire my own self to present my story to her in a language she would understand and with an answer to a question that all editors and agents want to know: Can we sell this book?

I answered the question in my proposal. She agreed. And now I have a 3 book deal.

It’s not as simple as I put it but the story behind the whole thing pretty much is.

A publisher’s goal is to sell books. The commercial writer’s goal is to sell their books. In order for both to achieve their goals they need each other. It’s like a convenient marriage. Therefore query process is sort of a flirt or pick-up line to see if there is a spark there between the two. Most publisher’s use agents as a sort of matchmaker. 

This last statement is the rub. The publishing industry took a big smack last year, which affected everyone’s bottom line. Thus, some agents I know have facilitated safe matches with their current clients, so they could remain solvent. It’s a survival game right now.

But what about the wannabes? What about the authors who have great books, but no agents willing to escort them to the ball?

For many writers this arrangement is like being the red-headed step child or the lovely swan princess or different. But they shouldn’t give up. They should dig in and continue writing.

As the publishing industry has changed and morphed and shifted it’s paradigm, then why haven’t literary agents shifted? Change is a top-down process with major institutions or a massive grassroots change at the bottom. Self-pubs have headed the grassroots movement below. The question you should ask yourself is if the query system doesn’t work, then what will work in the future? Because the writing on the wall is that authors will either have to hire someone like me to help them craft marcomm to publishers or become independent, upon which then they have to do everything on their dime. Because that’s what it boils down to. The bottom line.

 

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Weekend Chatterbox: Does Amazon own Your Publisher?


If you've been hanging around Amazon much, then you noticed some weird things happen after Steve Jobs announced the iPad, particularly the iBook feature in it. Some St. Martins Press books and their sisters and brothers living in the Macmillan house have disappeared from Amazon. According to The New York Times they didn't just disappear they were yanked. Apparently Amazon is standing firm on its point to keep e-books under $10. The i-books are around $12-15. As a reader I admit I like the reduced price, but I am concerned that the selections on the Kindle would be reduced. Moreover, I'm a huge fan of Farrar and St. Martin's Press, so now Amazon is pushing me toward the iPad. Not coll.
As an author I'm also concerned. Ooh the conundrum. Most publisher's pay a small royalty percentage to authors for e-books. Don't know if there will be addendums made to contracts for i-book sales. If not, then it doesn't matter what price is set, the author gets the slim pickings. But what it does set forth is a problem for authors on the part of distribution. Since online book sales continue to increase, and we know Amazon is one of the top reasons why, then if our books become ghost over there, how large of a chunk will that suspension take out of our sales? An even larger question--one I open up to the community--what does that mean for the publishing industry? Are they owned by Amazon? If so, then the ramifications about the future of publishing,especially whether authors would benefit from being independent over being published by a major publishing house matter anymore? Can we make money writing stories anymore? If you discuss over Twitter or Facebook, please use the #iYank hashtag


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Friday, November 27, 2009

Harlequin Horizons No More



Harlequin Publisher's new self-publishing arm, Harlequin Horizons name has been changed to Dell Arte Press. This name change is no shocker. Some Harlequin authors were livid over the name, because it appeared more like an imprint than a separate entity. The new site is www.dellartepress.com

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Why Westbow Maybe a "Go"



Okay. I'm sure you've heard by now that Thomas Nelson Publishers is transitioning WestBow Press(one of my faves back in the day) into a Self-Publisher entity with the same name, WestBow Press.

If you look at the numbers, last year about 300 books released were indies(500000 books published last year total.) This upside down reality makes you pause. Thus, it would be unwise for Thomas Nelson not to get a piece of that pie. Moreover, WestBow will have some type of distribution relationship with some of Thomas Nelson companies.

Now the challenge of course would be will bookstores recognize the new WestBow? Will authors be forced into the buy-back program for their books?

There is a lot to discuss. Michael Hyatt is chopping it up at his spot, all my writer's forums are talking about it, along with a few agents. Let's take a seat and see what develops as WestBow is put into play. In the meantime, I would love to know. If you could selfpub your book under a CBA publisher, would you do it?

Friday, May 23, 2008

African American Christian Publishing Company is seeking a Creative
Director. The qualified person will take the lead in designing and
maintaining the quality brand and image for our products. Also includes
development of daily graphic design/operation and web graphics design,
oversight of special productions, and project management. Manages a
minimum staff of 5 people providing them with direction and expertise.
Directs covers and interior designs for core and ancillary titles in
specified content areas and styles for related illustration programs.
Works collaboratively with our Editorial and Marketing departments to
establish and articulate design and art goals. Email resume and cover to igordon at urbanministries dot com.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

3 Reasons Why You Should Listen to Me Tonight

Tonight, Wednesday, September 26, 2007 at 9:00 pm EST / 8:00 CST tune in to The Abundant Solutions Hour. Gregory Turner and Brian J. Henderson, the hosts have invited me to be a special guest on tonight's show, to help you achieve 3 things this week:

1. Worship God with Your Talent
2. Realize that God has prepared you to achieve your dreams
3. Gain a Basic Knowledge of the Christian Book Publishing Industry
Bonus. Share your story of God's faith with others who need encouragement.

You can listen to the show here.
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/asemotivation
Or you can Tune in and Talk Here:


Dial In Number (718) 508-9600

If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to contact:
Gregory Turner, CC
President & CEO
Abundant Solutions Enterprises, Inc.

GregoryTurner@AbundantSolutionsEnterprises.com
info@mindalteringstrategies.com
www.AbundantSolutionsEnterprises.com

In order for dreams to come true, you must first wake up. - Gregory Turner

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Help Wanted: Kimani Press

Help Wanted

Title: Editorial Assistant
Company: Harlequin/Kimana Press
Location: NY, NY
Benefits: 401K, Bonuses, Dental, Flexible Hours, Health

The Job:
Administrative and editorial support for Kimani Press, a division of Harlequin focusing on fiction for the African American woman. Assist the general manager with administrative tasks as assigned; logging and trafficking manuscripts on in-house database; reading and evaluating slush manuscripts; coordinating author communications; gathering prelim materials from authors and editors; coordinating freelance workers on copy-writing and line-editing projects; assisting in creation of PowerPoint and Excel presentations; organizing mailings to support marketing campaigns and assisting in placement of advertising.


Qualifications:
  • Communication and proofreading skills are required.
  • Minimum of a bachelor level degree.
  • Previous office experience. a
  • An understanding of and affection for women’s fiction is a plus.
  • The ideal candidate will be looking to build a career in publishing.
Contact:
Human Resources
NYResumes@harlequin.ca
233 Broadway, Suite 1001
New York, NY 10279 USA
FAX: 212-227-8969
Qualified candidates only, please send cover letter with resume by email or fax. No phone calls please.

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Marimba: A New Children Spiritual Imprint


6/12/07, New York, NY/East Orange, NJ—Steven Zacharius, Chief Executive Officer and President of Kensington Publishing, and Wade Hudson, Chief Executive Officer and President of Hudson Publishing, announce a joint publishing agreement and new imprint dedicated to children’s books with spiritual and moral themes geared to the African-American market, as well as similar projects targeting the multicultural audience. The new imprint, called Marimba Books, begins publishing in 2008 with six titles.

Both of the Hudsons are authors in their own right and some of their works are reflected on the 2008 list. The list includes two titles in the I Love To… series, From Where I Stand by Cheryl Willis Hudson (Illustrator: Nancy Devard), Prayers from the Smallest Hands by Lauriece Hudson, and Pudding, Jeffery & Leah: Best Friends (Illustrator: Nancy Devard) and It’s Church Going Time both written by Wade Hudson (Illustrator Peter Ambush).

I'm excited about this, because Selah begins reading Chapter books this year. I have searched the public library and bookstores for a series She would like. Cam Jansen isn't her cup of tear or Ivy & Bean. But when I showed her NEATE and Kid Caramel online this past weekend her eyes lit up. SHe's at an age where she knows she is different than her friends and she notices that there aren't many black people in school and in her school books, so this line is important for her self esteem and to get her reading

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